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Word: soughing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

Donna has been on tour down Sough, along with a number of other Nashville performers, and a couple of weeks ago, on a gray Sunday afternoon at home in North Carolina, me and an old boy I know decided to tool out to the local fairgrounds to get just a taste of those sweet sounds...

Author: By Phil Patton, | Title: Cookin' It Up Country | 1/17/1974 | See Source »

...Abstract Expressionism, were it not for the inconvenient detail that he viewed all abstract art with crusty disdain. Reality-the flicker of bronze light on autumnal trees, the long profile of a beach in White Waves on Sand, Maine, the arches and pylons of Brooklyn Bridge, the scud and sough of an Atlantic sou'wester-was obdurate and irreducible for Marin, and had always to be returned to, loved, and above all, declared...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Fugues in Space | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

TROPICI opens in the brush of Northeast Brazil, where Miguel, a hired cattle herder, and his wife and children live. The owner of the herd has decided to move his cattle sough, and Miguel is now out of a job. Hearing of work in Recife, he buys passage on a truck for himself and his family, but fails to find employ there. A labor recruiter in Recife convinces him to make the long trip to Sao Paolo, again by truck. There he is hired as a construction worker on the Sao Paolo Hilton, and the films ends...

Author: By Joel Haycock>, AT THE ORSON WELLES AUGUST 3 THROUGH 5 | Title: Tropici | 8/1/1969 | See Source »

...there is Jim Federico, a highly-sough-after Rhode Island prospect. who chose Harvard over Brown because Crimson teams were so perenially bad he was sure of playing on them. Federico hasn't been in the IAB since freshman year...

Author: By Robert P. Marshall jr., | Title: The Sports Dope | 2/28/1967 | See Source »

...call yourselves Americans" feeling: Almost universally, the marchers were seen as unpatriotic. "You're all yellow bastards," one man yelled at the group. The pacifists tried to argue that America had no right to impose its will upon Sough Vietnam. "If there were an election in South Vietnam," said one pacifist to a hostile spectator, "and if a majority of the people said they wanted the Communists and wanted to distribute land to everyone, would we have a right to say NO?" Without hesitation, the boy responded "Yes, we could," and then proceeded to explain why. Repeatedly, the argument came...

Author: By Robert J. Samuolson, | Title: "We Don't Ask Police For Protection" -- Tale Of CNVA's Peace Walk | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

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